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Slide 1

Pharmacological Challenges in Treating HIV-HCV Co-infected Patients

David Back University of Liverpool UK

David Back University of Liverpool

May 2013

ARV Co-

med

Reduced Efficacy

Toxicity

This is the ‘simple example’! What about combination ARV and multiple co-meds?

Drug-Drug Interactions

HIV Infection

The Magnitude of the Problem

Slide 5 Risk for ‘clinically significant’ interactions

Marzolini et al. AVT 2010;15:413 Evans-Jones et al. CID 2010;50:1419

Kigen et al. Plos One 2010 Patel Ann Pharmacother 2011;45

Miller et al Pharmacother 2007;27:1379 De Maat et al. Clin Pharmacokinet 2003;42:223

Shah et al. CROI 2007, Abstr 573. 2007

Study Year Setting N CSDI Screening Tool VL Effect

de Maat 2004 Netherlands (hospital)

115 26% Liverpool website N/A

Shah et al 2007 USA (Medicaid)

571 30% Liverpool website; Micromedex

No VL impact

Miller et al 2007 USA (hospital)

153 41% DHHS; PI; Micromedex

N/A

Kigen et al 2009 Kenya (hospital)

996 34% Liverpool website N/A

Marzolini et al

2009 Switzerland (SHCS)

1497 40% Liverpool website No VL impact

Evans-Jones et al

2009 UK (hospital)

159 27% Liverpool website N/A

Patel et al 2011 USA 190 34% Lex-interact N/A

(N = 3674)

The Mechanisms Involved

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

Drug

Con

c.

Days

Interacting Drug

Why an increase in steady state of a drug?

Possible reasons for increased exposure? GI Tract Hepatic Renal

Back D Unpublished

Increase in pH

The breakdown of raltegravir 400 mg tablets at pH 1 to 8

Tablet breakdown rate increased at higher pH

0

0,5

1

1,5

2

2,5

3

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8

Tabl

et d

isso

lutio

n ra

te

(% o

f tab

let m

in-1

)

pH

Moss D & Back DJ – Unpublished observation

Dissolution of Raltegravir at different pH

Effect of lopinavir/r on digoxin exposure: transporter mediated

Absorption

Efflux

Digoxin AUC ↑1.8- fold

Wyen C et al Clin Pharm Ther; 2008; 84: 75-82

Effect of Boosted PI on intestinal & hepatic CYP3A4

MDZ AUC ↑3-fold MDZ AUC ↑10-fold

I.V. Midazolam Oral Midazolam

Dumond JB et al., Clin Pharmacol Ther. 2010; 87: 735–742.

Hepatic Interaction Intestinal + Hepatic Interaction

A major cause of drug-drug interaction:

inhibition of CYP3A4 enzyme

CYP 3A isozymes are involved in the metabolism

of majority of drugs

CYP 3A isozymes are the most abundant in the liver

Proportion of drugs that are substrates for major CYP enzymes

CYP 3A4

CYP 1A2 CYP 2A6

CYP 2B6 CYP 2C8

CYP 2C9 CYP 2C19

CYP 2D6

CYP 2E1

Hacker MP, et al. Pharmacology: Principles and Practice. Academic Press 2009

CYP: cytochrome P450 All percentages are approximate. For illustrative purposes, hepatic CYP enzymes present at <5% are all represented as 3.3%

Kiser JJ et al., JAIDS 2008; 15: 570-578

Effect of lopinavir/r on rosuvastatin exposure: hepatic transporter mediated

EACS Guidelines 2012

Drug

Con

c.

Days 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

Interacting Drug

Key Mechanisms of Drug Interactions: Why a decrease in steady state of a drug

Reasons for decreased exposure? Gut Liver

Back D Unpublished

Effect of Omeprazole on plasma levels of Rilpivirine

Van Heeswijk et al. 4th IAS Conference, Sydney, Australia, 22–25 July 2007, abstract TUPDB01

Co-administration of OMEPRAZOLE 20 mg reduced rilpivirine exposure by 40% Combination of rilpivirine (25 mg) with PPIs is contraindicated

Effect of H2-blockers can be circumvented with separate intake (12h before, or 4h after)

Crauwels et al. 9th International Congress on Drug Therapy in HIV Infection, Glasgow, UK, 9–13 November 2008.

Enyzme Induction • Antimycobacterial drugs

– Rifampicin (CYP3A, 2C9/19, UGT), – Rifabutin (CYP3A) – Isoniazid (2E1)

• Anticonvulsant drugs – Carbamazepine, Phenytoin, Phenobarbital (CYP3A)

• Herbals – St John’s wort (CYP3A)

Rifampicin Induction and Lopinavir/r

LPV/r 400/100 mg bid

LPV/r 400/100 mg bid + RMP

Dose adjustment LPV/r

800/200 mg BID

400/400 mg BID

-90%

La Porte CJ et al., AAC 2004; 48: 1553-1560.

Not Recommended

“If Sustiva is coadministered with rifampin to

patients weighing 50 kg or more, an increase in the dose of Sustiva to 800 mg once daily is recommended.”

Food and Drug Administration - January 6, 2012

CDC 2012 Update

http://www.cdc.gov/tb/publications/guidelines/TB_HIV_Drugs/PDF/tbhiv.pdf

Slide 22

• ‘Efavirenz-based antiretroviral therapy and rifampin-containing TB treatment at standard doses is the preferred treatment for HIV-related tuberculosis in adults’. We consider that data are insufficient to support a definitive statement regarding the need to increase the dose in persons over 50 kg.

http://www.cdc.gov/tb/publications/guidelines/TB_HIV_Drugs/PDF/tbhiv.pdf

Artemether Lumefantrine

J Antimicrob Chemother 2012; 67: 1217-1223

Beware – the unexpected!

What Constitutes a Clinically Relevant Drug-Drug Interaction? 20%, 30%, 50%, 70% decrease in PK OR

0.5-fold, 2-fold, 3-fold increase in PK?

Can be confusing! Depends on the individual drug and the exposure –

response relationship

Are we only concerned about interactions with oral drugs?

Corticosteroid metabolism and formulations

Drug Oral Inhaled Topical Eye/ear drops

Injection Rectal

Budesonide CYP3A4

Dexamethasone CYP3A4

Fludrocortisone CYP3A4

Fluticasone CYP3A4

Hydrocortisone CYP3A4

Prednisolone CYP3A4

Beclomethasone Esterase to active met

Triamcinolone CYP3A4

Mometasone CYP3A4

Created from SmPCs for all included drugs. Available at: http://www.medicines.org.uk/emc/.

HCV Infection

The Magnitude of the Problem

0 10 20 30 40

2003

2005

2007

2009

2011

Drug-drug interactions in Hepatitis C (No of publications)

2012 – 30 publications 2013 - ??

DDIs – an emerging ‘hot topic’ in Hepatitis C

Maasoumy B et al Clinical significance of drug-drug interactions in the era of direct acting antiviral agents against hepatitits C – a real

world experience. EASL 2013, Abs 856

The Mechanisms Involved

Small Intestines Liver

Adapted from Bailey DG, et al. Br J Clin Pharmacol. 1998:46:101–10

CYPs

Efflux

CYPs, UGTs

Telaprevir and Boceprevir interfere with the way the body handles other drugs

DRUG

DRUG

Efflux

Influx

Influx

Efflux

CYP3A4 important!

May be involvement of other enzymes

and transporters

HCV med

Co-med

Reduced Efficacy

Toxicity

Whereas the major effect of DAAs is to increase concentrations of co-med they may also decrease AND co-meds can interact with DAA

Clinical case: patient characteristics at time of treatment

BMI: body mass index; Hb: haemoglobin; HCV: hepatitis C virus; HDL: high-density lipoprotein

54-year-old male Smoker and no alcohol abuse Treatment naïve

Description

Genotype: HCV G1a Fibrosis stage: F3

HCV disease characteristics

BMI: 28 Type 2 diabetes (taking metformin) High cholesterol and cardiovascular risk >20% (taking atorvastatin) – Total

Chol: 1.70 g/L; HDL: 0.42 g/L Hypertension (taking propranolol) Suffering from mild depression (receiving behavioural therapy) Hb level: 14 g/dL

Other medical information

DDIs: patient’s medications

Telaprevir

Atorvastatin

PR

Metformin

Propranolol

Which medications are a concern with telaprevir?

ED: erectile dysfunction http://www.hep-druginteractions.org

Renal excretion – no interaction expected

Not anticipated to cause a problem when combined with DAAs

Metabolised by CYP2D6 (major) – no interaction expected

Metformin

Propranolol

Treatment decision

Because of interactions Atorvastatin was temporarily stopped for

12 weeks after consultation with the cardiologist No changes were made to the

metformin and propranolol prescriptions

Week 2–8 visits: results

Patient health Patient develops an upper

respiratory tract infection (deemed unrelated to treatment) He develops mild rash His depression worsens

(becomes moderate)

Telaprevir + PR

HCV RNA levels

0

2

4

6

0 4 8 12

HCV

RNA

(log 10

IU/m

L)

Weeks

Management of the patient’s upper respiratory tract infection

Clarithromycin

CYP 3A inhibitor & substrate Concern about increase in

telaprevir exposure Also concern of increase in

CLA – this may warrant ECG monitoring due to the possible risk of QT prolongation

A 5-day course of azithromycin was chosen due its reduced likelihood of interactions

Azithromycin

Not a CYP 3A inhibitor or substrate Drug interactions unlikely

http://www.hep-druginteractions.org ECG: electrocardiogram

Choose carefully

Management of mild rash: which corticosteroid?

• Not recommended with telaprevir and boceprevir • Prednisone and methylprednisolone are CYP3A substrates;

levels may significantly increase and lead to side effects

Systemic cortico-steroids

• OK to use concomitantly with HCV PIs • Although not expected to cause significant systemic

absorption – be watchful (lessons form HIV)

Topically applied steroids

http://www.hep-druginteractions.org; Cacoub P, et al. J Hepatol 2012;56:455–463

In this patient, a topically applied corticosteroid (betamethasone) was initiated

Interaction is unlikely*

Venlafaxine

Paroxetine Fluoxetine

Antidepressants and telaprevir

Interaction is likely, caution is advised

Sertraline

Trazodone Mirtazapine

http://www.hep-druginteractions.org

Some Antidepressants are metabolized by CYP 3A4

Some Antidepressants metabolized primarily by non CYP 3A4

* Caution – note escitalopram

0

2

4

6

0 12 24 36

HC

V R

NA

(log 1

0 IU

/mL)

Weeks

Treatment outcome: summary

Telaprevir + PR PR

SVR12

Rash disappeared; topical steroid stopped

Depression symptoms improved

Morphine and midazolam IV

Betamethasone Fluoxetine Restart statin

Drug Interaction Resources

Management of Hep Drug-Drug Interactions

HCV med

HIVmed

Reduced Efficacy

Toxicity

In a co-infected patient we now need to manage the interactions between the HCV and HIV medication as well as other co-meds

Co- med

ATV/r DRV/r LPV/r Efavirenz Rilpivirine Raltegravir Maraviroc NRTIs

Telaprevir Boceprevir Ribavirin Drugs in pipeline